Q: How did you create the Thistle Stop Cafe, and why did you
decide to write a book based on its creation and the history of tea?

A: The cafe was born out of a need to feed all the people
wanting to be a part of the Thistle Farms community and learn about our models
for housing women survivors and social enterprise. The idea of the cafe
came before the book and provided a great time frame to create a manuscript
with a bit of plot!

Sometimes tea books can get a bit dense and I thought
putting it in context of a new social enterprise and the hardships and joys of
establishing one would make it a better read.

Q: You write, "The relationship between tea and
religion remains strong throughout the world today." What are some of the
aspects of that relationship that are most meaningful to you?

A: One of the obvious aspects of the relationship is the
Japanese tea ceremony. It is a ritualized way to drink tea in which we
learn intention, gratitude, and healing.

One of the less obvious aspects is the connection between
any tea party and the fellowship of friends and family. When we gather and
drink tea from a shared pot, we come as equals to exchange ideas, to strengthen
relationships, and to ​calm our spirits.

Q: In the book, you discuss the concept of Shared Trade.
What is that, and how does tea fit into the fair trade movement?

A: Shared Trade is an alliance of women's social enterprises
throughout the world dedicated to increasing the value of producers of products
and increasing the markets for those products.

Tea is one of the great offerings of shared trade. We buy
at a higher than wholesale market price, offer the distributing and allow
customers to buy from many organizations from one site.

We have removed some of the links in the producer to
consumer chain and have committed ourselves to improving the lives of the women
in the shared trade partner enterprises. ​

Q: How is the cafe doing?

A: It is still unbelievable to me how well the cafe is
doing. The community has supported it faithfully and it is a
self-sustaining operation. ​

Q: What are you working on now?

A: In the upcoming year we are working on three
initiatives. First, we are expanding our national market through focused
campaigns such as the year of the geranium, the justice tea, and the hope
candle.

Second, we are furthering our outreach in other cities that
want to open housing first communities for women survivors​ of trafficking,
prostitution and addiction.

Finally, we are launching a capital campaign to expand our
Thistle Farms manufacturing facility and cafe to welcome more and more people
into this movement for women's freedom.

Q: Anything else we should know?

A: You should know that you and your readers are a part of
this movement. Tell your story, share our products, drink justice tea, and
continue to offer support to individual women trying to heal from the universal
issues of sexual violence they have borne on their backs. The story of
violence is tragic, but the story of Thistle Farms, the cafe, and the women is
a story of hope. ​

About Me

Author, THE PRESIDENT AND ME: GEORGE WASHINGTON AND THE MAGIC HAT, new children's book (Schiffer, 2016). Co-author, with Marvin Kalb, of HAUNTING LEGACY: VIETNAM AND THE AMERICAN PRESIDENCY FROM FORD TO OBAMA (Brookings Institution Press, 2011).